HeroicPandas
Heroic!
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2012
- Messages
- 1,547
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2013
When comparing the reactivity of oxygen and ozone, do i compare BOND ENERGIES?
What's written there is fine (for HSC). When I read HeroicPandas' response, he said that the coordinate covalent bond was weaker.
In chemistry, chemical stability is inversely proportional to chemical reactivity.There is a difference between stability and reactivity (I believe) which you guys aren't addressing.
Reactivity is largely dictated by bond strength in a molecule and electron configuration and no so much by polarity etc.O3 is more reactive than O2 due to the molecular structure and configuration (creating dipoles - refer to someth1ng's diagram).
In the O3 vs O2 case, we're breaking bonds to decompose it into two different species.Hmm... what about ethane vs ethene then? From the O3 vs O2 argument, O3 is more reactive due to it's overall weaker intramolecular bonds - however this doesn't apply to ethane.
yes resonance structure browhen comparing the reactivity of oxygen and ozone, do i compare bond energies?